Literature DB >> 8172251

Congenital abnormalities associated with limb deficiency defects: a population study based on cases from the Hungarian Congenital Malformation Registry (1975-1984).

J A Evans1, M Vitez, A Czeizel.   

Abstract

Limb deficiency defects (LD) occurring among 1,575,904 births in Hungary during 1975-1984 were reviewed. The overall birth prevalence of LD was 1 in 1,816. This paper discusses the nature and distribution of the limb and other defects in the 275 (32%) children who had structural malformations in other systems. Two main forms of classification were used: morphologic and causal. Additional malformations were most commonly seen in infants with amelia, rudimentary limb (RL), radial/tibial (RT), intercalary or central axis (CA) LD and rarely in those with terminal transverse (TT) or ulnar/fibular (UF) defects. Upper limbs (81%) were involved significantly more often than lower limbs (42%) and there were more right-sided defects (83% vs. 71%) due to an excess of right arm involvement especially with radial ray and split hand anomalies. Single limb involvement was relatively common with amelia (88%), UF (82%), RT (50%), and TT (50%) defects. With other LD, multimelic involvement was more characteristic. This was usually symmetric with intercalary and RL defects but asymmetric with CA anomalies and digital deficiencies (DD). From a causal perspective, 17% of cases had genetic disorders, 52% had recognized associations, anomalies, sequences, environmental causes or patterns of unknown origin, and 31% had unknown patterns of malformations. The commonest entities were amnion disruption sequence (16% of cases) and VACTERL association (8%). Both of these disorders showed unusual temporal distribution. As anticipated, patterns of malformations differed with the type of LD. Amelia and digital amputations were often seen with body wall defects, atypical anencephaly or encephalocele, and cleft lip reflecting amnion disruption. Rudimentary limb was seen with anencephaly, omphalocele, renal agenesis, aberrant genitalia, and imperforate anus, reflecting defects of blastogenesis including the cloacal exstrophy and caudal regression sequences and Schisis association. Radial/tibial defects were associated with different patterns depending on whether the limb defects were unilateral or bilateral. Unilateral defects occurred with anomalies suggesting VACTERL association or the facio-auriculo-vertebral anomaly, while bilateral defects occurred more often in genetic or potentially genetic disorders including VACTERL with hydrocephalus. Central axis defects showed three main patterns of association: one reflecting the ectrodactyly-ectodermal dysplasia-clefting syndrome; one with tongue anomalies representing a variant of oro-mandibular-limb (Hanhart) anomaly, and the last with hydronephrosis indicating a group of "acro-renal" syndromes. Strong associations with other anomalies were not seen in the groups with TT, UF, or intercalary defects.

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Mesh:

Year:  1994        PMID: 8172251     DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.1320490111

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Med Genet        ISSN: 0148-7299


  14 in total

Review 1.  Amelia: a multi-center descriptive epidemiologic study in a large dataset from the International Clearinghouse for Birth Defects Surveillance and Research, and overview of the literature.

Authors:  Eva Bermejo-Sánchez; Lourdes Cuevas; Emmanuelle Amar; Marian K Bakker; Sebastiano Bianca; Fabrizio Bianchi; Mark A Canfield; Eduardo E Castilla; Maurizio Clementi; Guido Cocchi; Marcia L Feldkamp; Danielle Landau; Emanuele Leoncini; Zhu Li; R Brian Lowry; Pierpaolo Mastroiacovo; Osvaldo M Mutchinick; Anke Rissmann; Annukka Ritvanen; Gioacchino Scarano; Csaba Siffel; Elena Szabova; María-Luisa Martínez-Frías
Journal:  Am J Med Genet C Semin Med Genet       Date:  2011-10-14       Impact factor: 3.908

Review 2.  Phocomelia: a worldwide descriptive epidemiologic study in a large series of cases from the International Clearinghouse for Birth Defects Surveillance and Research, and overview of the literature.

Authors:  Eva Bermejo-Sánchez; Lourdes Cuevas; Emmanuelle Amar; Sebastiano Bianca; Fabrizio Bianchi; Lorenzo D Botto; Mark A Canfield; Eduardo E Castilla; Maurizio Clementi; Guido Cocchi; Danielle Landau; Emanuele Leoncini; Zhu Li; R Brian Lowry; Pierpaolo Mastroiacovo; Osvaldo M Mutchinick; Anke Rissmann; Annukka Ritvanen; Gioacchino Scarano; Csaba Siffel; Elena Szabova; María-Luisa Martínez-Frías
Journal:  Am J Med Genet C Semin Med Genet       Date:  2011-10-14       Impact factor: 3.908

Review 3.  An epigenetic association of malformations, adverse reproductive outcomes, and fetal origins hypothesis related effects.

Authors:  Mark Lubinsky
Journal:  J Assist Reprod Genet       Date:  2018-05-09       Impact factor: 3.412

4.  Tetra-amelia with lung hypoplasia and facial clefts, Roberts-SC syndrome: report of two cases.

Authors:  M Ragavan; Sarweswar Reddy; Chandramohan Kumar
Journal:  Pediatr Surg Int       Date:  2010-10       Impact factor: 1.827

5.  p63 Gene mutations in eec syndrome, limb-mammary syndrome, and isolated split hand-split foot malformation suggest a genotype-phenotype correlation.

Authors:  H van Bokhoven; B C Hamel; M Bamshad; E Sangiorgi; F Gurrieri; P H Duijf; K R Vanmolkot; E van Beusekom; S E van Beersum; J Celli; G F Merkx; R Tenconi; J P Fryns; A Verloes; R A Newbury-Ecob; A Raas-Rotschild; F Majewski; F A Beemer; A Janecke; D Chitayat; G Crisponi; H Kayserili; J R Yates; G Neri; H G Brunner
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2001-07-17       Impact factor: 11.025

6.  A neonate with anorectal malformation with rare limb defects report of a case.

Authors:  Simmi K Ratan; Kamal Nain Rattan; John Ratan; Punita Kumari Sodhi; Vipin Bhatia
Journal:  Pediatr Surg Int       Date:  2005-10-21       Impact factor: 1.827

7.  Congenital hand differences: Prevalence among school going children in Mangalore city.

Authors:  Mithun Pai G; B N Jagannath Kamath
Journal:  J Orthop       Date:  2022-03-19

8.  Amelia, dextrocardia, asplenia, and congenital short bowel in deleted ring chromosome 4.

Authors:  J W Hou; T R Wang
Journal:  J Med Genet       Date:  1996-10       Impact factor: 6.318

9.  4q32-q35 and 6q16-q22 are valuable candidate regions for split hand/foot malformation.

Authors:  Dunja Niedrist; Iosif W Lurie; Albert Schinzel
Journal:  Eur J Hum Genet       Date:  2009-02-18       Impact factor: 4.246

10.  Birth prevalence for congenital limb defects in the northern Netherlands: a 30-year population-based study.

Authors:  Ecaterina Vasluian; Corry K van der Sluis; Anthonie J van Essen; Jorieke E H Bergman; Pieter U Dijkstra; Heleen A Reinders-Messelink; Hermien E K de Walle
Journal:  BMC Musculoskelet Disord       Date:  2013-11-16       Impact factor: 2.362

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